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The Pamlico settlement and the little town of Bath were not
allowed the chance to develop peacefully, for both rebellion
and Indian warfare soon turned the area into a battleground.
Indeed, the town was born amidst the strife which eventually
culminated in the armed rebellion known as Cary's Rebellion.
The quarrel that rocked the North Carolina colony and led
to this rebellion was essentially a religious conflict with political
overtones. In 1672, George Fox, founder of the Society of Friends
(or Quakers), visited Albemarle County (later broken up into
Chowan, Currituck, Pasquotank, and Perquimans counties) and established
his church there. In succeeding years, this church grew and became
strongly entrenched in the colony, where for several decades
it was the sole representative of organized religion.
In 1694-with the appointment of the Quaker, John Archdale
as governor, this church came to dominate all branches of the
government. Consequently, those who professed the Anglican (or
Church of England) faith felt that they were being discriminated
against in political matters.
In 1699, a zealous friend of the Church of England, Henderson
Walker, became Deputy Governor and arrived in Albemarle. In 1700,
he persuaded the General Assembly to pass a vestry act establishing
the Church of England as the colony's official church, to be
supported by taxes to be levied upon the colonists.
At almost the same time Queen Anne came to the throne, thus
necessitating the renewing of various oaths of loyalty by the
colony's officials and Assemblymen. The Quakers, unable to swear
to an oath (a tenet of their faith), offered to affirm as they
had done in the past. The friends of Anglican establishment now
in power, however, refused to accept this as sufficient, thereby
barring all Quakers from public office in the colony.
On these and similar issues the colony quickly split into
two parties - the Church party, which supported the establishment,
and the Quaker party which opposed it. Matters went from bad
to worse, and politics became increasingly bitter as time went
on.
In 1705, the well-known South Carolinian, Thomas Cary, was
named Deputy Governor of Albemarle. He quickly showed a strong
preference for the Church party, causing the Quakers to send
Emanuel Low to England to secure his removal from office. Low
accomplished his mission, but on returning to North Carolina
found Cary in South Carolina and William Glover, president of
the council, acting for him.
It soon became clear to Emanuel Low that William Glover was
a far more ardent supporter of the establishment than Cary, and
he withheld the Lords Proprietors order removing Cary from office.
Cary, meanwhile, switched his allegiance to the Quaker party,
and in 1708 he managed to oust Glover from office and force him
and the more ardent supporters of the Church party to flee to
Virginia. From 1708 to 1710, Cary and the Quaker party dominated
the political life of the colony.
In January 1711, Edward Hyde arrived in North Carolina claiming
the governorship of the colony. While his commission as governor
had not been technically perfected, Cary and the Quaker party
seemed at first willing to have Hyde assume the office. But when
Hyde began to pursue a policy hostile to the Quaker interest
soon after taking office, Cary refused to recognize him and claimed
the governorship as legally his until such time as Hyde could
produce his commission.
With this, the colony, already at fever pitch after years
of the most bitter political and religious strife, split into
two armed camps, and open warfare quickly ensued.
The Pamlico settlements and the little town of Bath, born
amidst these troubles, quickly found themselves enmeshed in this
web of factionalism.
Thomas Cary, about whose head the struggle raged, maintained
his home and plantation on the Pamlico, and as an original lot
holder of Bath was so closely identified with the town that it
was often referred to as "the seat of government" during
his governorship. Many of the inhabitants of Bath County were
his loyal supporters and rallied to his side when, arguments
and legal processes failing, Governor Hyde declared him in open
rebellion and determined to seize Cary by force.
Having resolved upon this policy, Hyde proceeded to gather
an armed force that he considered sufficient to undertake this
mission and assembled 80 men under arms at his home in the Salmon
Creek area of present-day Bertie County.
On May 27, 1711, he crossed Albemarle Sound and entered the
Roanoke River where he rendezvoused with 70 more men on its south
shore. After a two-day march, this force arrived on the Pamlico
River at the home of Cary, who meanwhile had fled to the home
of one "Colonel Daniels," only a short way down the
river. (While identification is uncertain, this was in all probability
the plantation home of the former governor, Robert Daniel, located
at Archbell Point on Bath Creek).
On the 29th of May, Hyde and his armed force advanced on Robert
Daniel's home, which had been well fortified with five pieces
of cannon and contained about 40 armed men. Hyde found the place
too strong to storm, and after a futile attempt to persuade their
surrender, he retired from the field and returned to the Albemarle
region on June 1.
The failure of Hyde to take Cary heartened Cary's followers,
and large numbers now rallied to his side. Cary declared himself
the true governor of the colony, and proceeded to fit out a brigantine
of six guns and several smaller vessels. On June 30, 1711, Cary-with
his armed brigantine-began an attack on Hyde and his council
at the home of Colonel Thomas Pollock on the Chowan River. The
followers of Hyde had only 60 men under arms and two cannon,
and affairs looked dark for them when two strong landing parties
from the brigantine headed for shore. At this moment, however,
a lucky shot from one of the two cannon on shore severed the
brigantine's mast and so frightened Cary's forces that they cut
their anchor and sailed away.
Hyde then dispatched some of his best men in a sloop to overtake
the brigantine. When this expedition entered the sound, they
found the brigantine beached with only three men aboard, the
remainder having fled in confusion to their homes. The brigantine
was seized with all her guns and ammunition, and the strength
of Cary was thereby dealt a severe blow. Cary, however, with
the aid of a recent arrival from England, Richard Roach, fortified
an island in the Pamlico and began to gather and arm another
large force of men. An attempt by the Hyde party to drive him
out failed, and the cause of Cary momentarily brightened once
again.
Meanwhile, Governor Alexander Spottswood of Virginia had determined
to come to the aid of the Hyde faction, and a militia was readied
to march into Carolina. A company of royal marines from the guardships
in the Chesapeake Bay was immediately dispatched to the aid of
Hyde in mid-July, 1711.
The Virginia militia was never sent into North Carolina, for
the marines' arrival completely unnerved Cary's followers. Though
willing to contest with Hyde for power, Cary's men were unwilling
to fire upon the royal standard, and thereby become subject to
a charge of treason against the British Crown.
Cary and his chief lieutenants fled their fortified homes
on the Pamlico River and retired to Virginia, where they were
seized and sent in chains to England. Here Cary's friends were
able to secure his freedom, and shortly thereafter he returned
to Carolina (where he soon slipped into obscurity).
The disrupting effects of the Cary Rebellion on the life of
Bath and the Pamlico region can hardly be exaggerated. As the
stronghold of the Cary faction, the Pamlico area, throughout
the spring and summer of 1711, was in a constant turmoil. Many
Bath citizens, including George Birkenhead, Levi Truewhite, Thomas
Sparrow, Simon Alderson Jr., and John Porter, were among Cary's
chief lieutenants.
From 1708 until the collapse of Cary's Rebellion in July 1711,
the courts and government in general ceased to function. One
observer noted that plundering and destruction had ruined many
during the civil strife, while on every side one could hear "the
complaints of the poor men & families, who have been so long
in arms that they have lost their crops & will want bread."
Where crops were planted and tended, a severe drought during
the summer of 1711 had severely damaged their yield. To add to
the hardship and suffering of this fearful summer, yellow fever
raged through the colony, bringing death to many.
Yet amid these troubles, still more ominous clouds were gathering
on the horizon, and a storm that would all but obliterate Bath
County and "that famous city of Bath" was about to
break. The scourge of all exposed frontier areas, Indian massacre
and war, hung over the fever-racked settlers.
Edited from: A History of Colonial Bath, by Herbert R. Paschal
Jr. (Raleigh, N.C.: Edwards & Broughton, 1955).
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